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Europäische Sozialfonds+

Social Innovation in your country

What are Competence Centres?

Funded in part through the 2014-2020 European Social Fund and the EU programme for Employment and Social Innovation (EaSI) a series of six consortia were selected to set up national competence centres and drive social innovation – locally, regionally, nationally and transnationally. 

Covering 25 countries and mobilising 148 organisations, consortia aim to cultivate networks, build capacities and synergies, spotlight efficiencies and develop the tools and methods that will be essential to growing social innovation (SI) across the EU. 

Currently, these six projects are investigating national ecosystems for SI to provide for a better understanding of the starting point in each country. This includes mapping the most important stakeholders (project promoters, funders, support organisations), their expertise and needs for capacity building.

Based on this initial mapping the aim is to establish in each country a competence centre, which will focus on certain key functions, such as:

  • building a joint strategy and action plan for promoting social innovation in the country
  • linking different kind of stakeholders, helping them to find synergies and pool together their expertise and develop joint advocacy work
  • providing capacity building to stakeholders depending on their needs
  • helping stakeholders to make good use of available EU funding (ESF+ and other EU funds and programmes)
  • help social innovation stakeholders to connect transnationally to exchange and cooperate with their peers across the EU.

This work will help ESF+ Managing Authorities in programming and implementing actions with ESF+ funds.

What’s next?

One continuous challenge in the field of social innovation is how to scale up the innovative solutions and their impact. For this reason each consortium is also asked to run a test of scaling up or replicating one promising social innovation. This is a project in itself: depending of the nature of the social innovation the scaling might take very different paths. Some would– require work to conceptualise new processes in human resources or developing working business models to make the projects financially sustainable. In some other cases, the focus could be on convincing public service providers to roll out a new delivery model, emerging from a social innovation project.

Competence centres will establish different organisational structures or networks depending what suits to their country. They are expected to become a reliable source of knowledge and expertise; from an ESF+ perspective, this work will inform attempts to set up also a European Competence Centre for Social Innovation – with a transnational cooperation platform that would allow far greater levels of collaboration across Europe.

For more information

Social innovation is a rapidly-developing aspect of ESF+ funding. The competence centre initiative will be critical to ensuring all communities benefit from all available opportunities. Below, you can find factsheets detailing the activities of consortia collaborating to build these centres.